* To benefit from the precompiled-header (PCH) it MUST provide "the first C token."
Advantages:
Never worry about the include stack again. Remember, this means one less thing
for random module developers, community people learning C++, and new developers
to deal with. It should reduce the learning curve and barrier for participation.
Disadvantages:
Makes overall compilation a bit slower, especially without any additional
work to improve it again. There are several opportunities, places where the
PCH is probably being ignored, etc that can be addressed.
* librb is no longer a separately configured subproject.
* charybdis is now a standalone directory with a binary.
* Include path layout now requires a directory ircd/ rb/ etc.
channel mode classification which is required by RPL_MYINFO indicating arity,
and RPL_ISUPPORT indicating an enumerated class. The content of these replies
had previously been generated by hardcoded strings of some letters.
Channel modes require classification which corresponds to the
CHANMODES= data in RPL_ISUPPORT. Classes A,B,C can then be
listed in the unary column of RPL_MYINFO. cflag_add() is updated
for this. Additional cleanup of chmode.h and channel.h
circularity is also proffered within.
Submitted-by: Jason Volk <jason@zemos.net>
There are two important caveats here, however:
1) Aliased commands have more than 8 parameters will be truncated;
there's nothing I can do about this.
2) Parameters with colons will not be handled as you expect. Again,
nothing I can do about this.
This also lays the groundwork for the netjoin batch type, but that isn't
implemented yet. I don't like how some of this is implemented but it'll
have to do for now...
Compile tested, needs more testing.
It's a bit of a hack, but better than before. Rather than rehashing
(which could get us into an endless loop), we now segregate the
configuration phase (creating entries ircd-side in case we restart authd
later) and sending phases (when configure_authd() is called). Since we
have to call configure_authd() no matter what (to send timeouts etc.)
and we have to send this data to configure authd anyway, and sending
duplicate data is bad, this is the only way I can think of for now.
It seems to come from an era where long long didn't exist and 64-bit
machines weren't common. 32-bit machines are still common but I can't
imagine this will have much performance impact there.
This "fixes" #179 in title only, but see comments within.